India-Pakistan | |
10 men plotting to kill, bomb, destroy arrested | |
2008-02-16 | |
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The men were arrested in coordination with the district Crime Investigation Department (CID) police after a spy informed them that a newly formed terrorist organization was engaged in planning for Election Day and the days after. On Jan 18, some men were intercepted at Naurus Chowrangi by the CID police. There was an encounter but they all escaped. A police team of the above-mentioned officials was then formed and on February 15 and the men were arrested from Qayyumabad, Korangi Industrial Area and Baghdadi. Their names are: Asif Iqbal alias K Area wallah alias Saeed (Jaish-e-Mohammad and Harkatul Mujahideen), Yasir Afaq alias Nasir alias Saad, (Jaish and HM), Mohammad Jan alias Mustafa, (Jaish and HM), Abdul Wahid alias Zubair (Jaish), Mohammad Asif (Jaish), Aanatullah Khan alias Taufiq (Jaish), Mohammad Arshad alias Asad (Jaish), Mohammad Zeeshan alias Mastaan Baloch alias Shani (Jaish), Wasim Ahmed alias Wasim (Jaish) and Zainul Abideen alias Zain. Two main active and group leaders Wajahat alias Sami alias Gulfam alias Mansoor and Mohammad Hassan alias Ali were not arrested. However, two members Mohammad Kashif Ehsan alias Sohail and Mohammad Bin Ahmed were arrested in the murder case of the vice-president of National Bank of Pakistan and a protocol officer of former finance minister Omer Yaqoob. The IGP said that from the initial interrogations and the literature it became clear that they were first affiliated with the HM and then Jaish and were also involved in the fighting in Afghanistan. They formed a separate organization after the Lal Masjid operation and established contact in Karachi. Funding was provided by a Mohammad Hassan Amir who had a business in the UK. Amir came to Karachi and started a business at the Karachi Stock Exchange. It was the responsibility to Asif alias K Area wallah to rob banks for funds. He is suspected of being behind the failed bid at a bank at Korangi No. 5 in 2007. They brought weapons from Swat and snatched SMGs after hurting policeman at Korangi. The police recovered a laboratory from Korangi Industrial Area. Wajahat alias Sami was in charge of the factory. Wajahat and Mohammad Hassan Amir alias Ali were the masterminds in bomb making. They reportedly confessed: In 2007, the organization robbed a shop at Japan Plaza on the demand of Mullah Dadullah, a Taliban commander in Afghanistan, and provided him around 150 walkie talkie sets and other equipment such as lap tops, wireless sets via Tahir, another Taliban leader in Sohrab Goth, Karachi. This organization had links with the Taliban commander Tahir in Wana and Dadullah group in Afghanistan. They sent blankets, clothes, shoes to the Taliban in Miran Shah and Afghanistan. They have rented houses and storehouses for hostages in different areas of Karachi. They want to target charity groups for what they say are links to the Free Masons and other groups. The also reportedly had information about the members of a Rotary club. The police recovered: 3 submachine guns, one 0.223 rifle, two TT pistols, four hand grenades, 30 detonators, two local bombs, black explosive rope, orange detonating cord, five kilogram petroleum jelly, five kilogram glycerin, five walkie talkies, ten kilogram RDX, fifteen kilogram readymade explosives in a drum, 48 CDs, maps, hundreds of bullets, a personal telephone diary of deceased Dr Hameedullah, two snatched motorcycles, hit lists. | |
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India-Pakistan | |
Pakistan foils suicide attack | |
2008-01-20 | |
Pakistani police say they foiled a planned attack on a Shi'ite Muslim procession with cyanide and suicide bombs. Pakistani police say they had averted a disaster with the arrest of five militants planning to attack the processions. The arrests in the southern city of Karachi came as minority Shi'ite Muslims across Pakistan gathered for religious commemorations that have in recent years drawn attacks from Sunni Muslim militants. More, from Pak Daily Times... Sindh Police Inspector General (IG) Azhar Ali Farooqui told a press conference that they had arrested the militants after a brief encounter on a tip-off. The five militants, one of whom was preparing to become a suicide bomber, belonged to different Sunni Muslim militant groups - Jaish-e-Muhammad, Harkatul Mujahideen and Harkat-e-Jihad-e-Islami.
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India-Pakistan |
October 18 blasts were suicide bombings: police |
2007-11-21 |
Chief of police Azhar Ali Farooqui has confirmed that the twin explosions that took place on October 18 were suicide bombings and two bombers had attacked the convoy of Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Chairperson Benazir Bhutto. The investigation team is very close to reaching a conclusion but I cannot yet disclose anything to the media regarding the involvement of Qari Zafar or any other militant group, Farooqui told Daily Times. Responding to a question on reports that explosive material was attached to the body of a small child and went off inside a police mobile unit, Farooqui said that everyone had their own interpretation but they had not found anything in their investigations to substantiate these reports. The PPP leadership has refused, however, to accept the statement and the investigations by the police. We cannot trust the police investigation because they did not preserve the crime scene, they lodged an FIR without consulting the PPP leadership and did not use any international support or call any foreign expert, PPP leader Nisar Khuhro said to Daily Times. He alleged that the police had not sincerely worked on the case which is why the party demanded that they provide proof if these bombings were, indeed, suicide attacks. We will only say something when the police and the government answer our questions. Meanwhile, sources told Daily Times that several people had been taken into custody. The (alleged) involvement of inmates Mullah Sultan and Khalid had been confirmed, sources said, but that of groups such as Qari Zafar and Mufti Ilyas, which have previously been involved in incidents such as Nishtar Park and the killing of Shia cleric Allama Hassan Turabi, has yet to be confirmed. Sources said that investigators had mainly focused on three groups of militants Amjad Farooqui, Mufti Zakir, and Sultan and Akram alias Lahori and have been interrogating them. |
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India-Pakistan |
Hundreds of opposition workers arrested |
2007-11-17 |
![]() In Gujranwala, police arrested over 200 Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) workers and roughed up several for taking out a rally in connection with the long-march. Hundreds of PPP workers led by party divisional president and MNA Imtiaz Warraich took out the rally, but police baton-charged and tear-gassed them and arrested over 200 participants, according to a PPP press release. Warraich, PPP Lahore divisional president and MNA Chaudhry Manzoor, MPA Ijaz Samaa, MPA Khalid Bajwa, Malik Tahir Akhtar, MPA Lala Shakeelur Rehman, Sheikh Iqbal, PPP Sialkot President Zahid Bashir, Babar Ghumman, Malik Shumail, Tariq Gujjar, Amer Tufail, Fazl Abbas, Chaudhry Tariq and Abdullah Virk were among those arrested, the release added. More than 100 Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) supporters were arrested outside various mosques in Karachi on Friday, but police denied these arrests. The JIs Sarfaraz Ahmed told Daily Times that more than 100 MMA and JI activists had been taken into custody. Police chief Azhar Ali Farooqui denied the arrests. In Peshawar, police arrested four Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) leaders and three Awami National Party (ANP) activists from separate rallies on Friday. JUI-F NWFP General Secretary Maulana Shaujaul Mulk, former ministers Asif Iqbal Dudzai and Amanullah Haqqani and JUI-F NWFP Information Secretary Abdul Jalil Jan were arrested from a rally staged by Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) activists. Jamaat-e-Islami leaders, including MMA provincial naib ameer Mushtaq Ahmed Khan, evaded arrest. At a rally in the Hashtnagri area, police arrested three ANP activists Yasir Zaman, Mohammad Zaman and Alamgir Khalil. JUI-Fs maiden rally: The JUI-F workers and leaders took to the streets in Peshawar for the first time to protest against the emergency rule. After Friday prayers, the JUI-F protesters started a march from Markazi Darul Qura at Namakmandi but police stopped them near the Cinema Road. The PPP womens wing workers in Peshawar also protested against the state of emergency and suspension of the Constitution. |
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India-Pakistan |
3 killed in PPP Karachi protest |
2007-11-16 |
Three youngsters were reportedly gunned down and five others, including law enforcement personnel, injured in Lyari on Thursday on the third-day of rioting following the house arrest of former premier Benazir Bhutto in Lahore. Also, police baton-charged and arrested activists of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf (PTI), the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) and the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) in Lahore and Peshawar. Karachi police chief Azhar Ali Farooqui confirmed two deaths, adding that there were not killed by police firing. It is possible that they were gunned down by protesters or by gangsters who are also rioting, he said. Riots broke out in Gulistan-e-Johar, Keamari, Safoora Goth, Pak Colony and Golimar. The police used tear gas and batons to disperse the rioters. There was also a clash between gangsters and some shopkeepers, and police opened fire to disperse them, Lyari resident Shafi Balouch said. The victims were identified as Abdul Rehman, 9, Tufail, 12, and Ahmed Maqsood, 25. |
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India-Pakistan |
Four heads sent to KU for DNA tests |
2007-10-20 |
![]() Well placed sources in the CID told Daily Times that the CID police collected four heads from the scene. These heads have yet to be identified or claimed. After the DNA is tested, if a family member submits a claim, verification will be carried out by matching blood and DNA. Some sources in the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) said that the possibility of two suicide bombers cannot be avoided and investigation teams are focusing on the issue. A senior CID official, SP Raja Umer Khatab, said that the CID police are working on the case and that they are taking the finger prints of the body parts at the scene. Sources also said that the explosives used in Thursdays attack were the same used in the Nishtar Park bombing and the attack on MMA member and Shia leader Maulana Hassan Turabi. Sources suspected that Abid Mehsood, who is the right-hand man of Baitullah Mehsood, was the mastermind behind these attacks and that the attacks were carried out with the help of Mufti Ilyas of the Lashkar-e-Jhangvi. According to witnesses, there was a suspicious man who was injured and brought to the JPMC. A group of plain-clothed men came in, interrogated him and then took him away. Witnesses said that they heard the man saying that his name was Sarfraz and that he was a resident of Landhi, however, the men surrounding him read out his ID card which revealed that he was from Shikarpur. Capital City Police Officer Azhar Ali Farooqui denied that this incident took place. |
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